Call: 2018
Thomas Yarrow has a broad civil practice, with three core areas of focus:
Thomas’s public sector practice covers the full spectrum of public policy, decision-making and exercise of public powers, with specialism at the central government level in sanctions and anti-money laundering, justice and security, and immigration; and at the local level in data protection, children and adult social care, policing, and highways.
Thomas is a member of the Attorney General’s London C Panel (Civil).
Sanctions and Anti-Money Laundering
Thomas advises regularly on the operation and effect of the UK Sanctions regime, which has had heightened focus and undergone cutting-edge developments in recent years following Russia’s annexation of Crimea and invasion of Ukraine. With Thomas’s broad-based platform, he is well-placed to handle matters arising out of evolving – and in some cases untested – domestic and foreign policy with a criminal, human rights, commercial, and banking law nexus.
Justice and Security
Although instructed by departments across Whitehall, Thomas has a particular specialism in the field of justice and security, assisting the Home and Foreign Secretaries, the Secretary of State for Defence, and the Lord Chancellor in a number of significant judicial reviews in recent years, including cases testing the extra-territorial scope of the UK’s obligations under the ECHR; challenging remuneration packages for police and prison officers; and addressing rules for retention of records on the Police National Computer.
He was junior counsel for the Home Secretary in the Court of Appeal in R (Bridges) v Chief Constable South Wales Police [2020] EWCA Civ 1058 on the use of automated facial recognition technology on members of the public by South Wales Police. More recently, Thomas was junior counsel again for the Home Secretary in the judicial review on police pay R (Police Superintendents’ Association) v Police Remuneration Review Body and the Secretary of State for the Home Department [2023] EWHC 1838 (Admin). Mr Justice Fordham’s reported judgment at the permission stage is now a leading authority on the scope of the Secretary of State’s duty of candour in judicial review proceedings.
Immigration
Thomas regularly acts and advises on immigration matters, both for the Home Office and for applicants/claimants. He handles both private law claims in the County Courts and High Court, as well as judicial reviews in the Upper Tribunal and Administrative Court.
Data Protection
Thomas is regularly instructed in matters of data protection and information law in claims against public bodies for alleged misuse of private information, breaches of the GDPR and/or Data Protection Acts, and violation of Article 8 Convention rights. The claims which Thomas handles frequently involve complicated questions of vicarious liability, for instance in so-called ‘rogue employee’ cases.
Social Services
Thomas regularly acts for both claimants and local government in cases testing the powers and duties of local authorities in children and adult social services. He has extensive experience in cases with an overlapping private and public law nexus, such as so-called ‘failure to remove’ litigation sitting at the interface of common law negligence and section 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998. He recently acted as Junior to Paul Stagg KC in a large-scale High Court action alleging violation of Article 8 over a number of years in the context of a residential placement of a child with complex educational and behavioural needs.
He also handles debt claims and ancillary litigation which arise out of a local authority’s power to charge adults for meeting their care needs.
Policing
Thomas’s expertise and experience in policing is set out in a separate section below.
Highways
Thomas has a well-trodden day-to-day practice in the County Courts and High Court, for both claimants and defendants in highways litigation. Because of his more general public law background, he is particularly sought after in more complex cases with ‘non-feasance’ and ‘failure to confer a benefit’ issues, such as where a highway authority might be liable for creation of a danger by negligent design and/or under common nuisance.
Cross-border litigation forms a core area of Thomas’s practice. Before coming to the Bar, Thomas worked as a Civil Servant, including as a policy advisor at the Brexit Department. His former experience gives him an encyclopaedic knowledge of legislation, treaties and international conventions in the field of Private International Law, which he has applied to his cross-border practice, building a reputation as a go-to barrister for complex questions of jurisdiction and applicable law. He wrote the relevant chapter on such in the latest edition of the leading practitioner textbook, Saggerson on Travel Law and Litigation. His practice spans cross-border personal injury, commercial disputes and consumer protection.
Cross-border Personal Injury
Thomas has a strong day-to-day practice assisting claimants and defendants in personal injury cases with a foreign nexus, with extensive experience of cases brought under the Package Travel Regulations both 1992 and 2018; cases requiring proof of local standards as distinct from foreign law; cases under the Athens or Montreal Conventions; cases with uneasy tensions between the lex causi and the lex fori (for instance – Spanish penalty interest); cases with conflicts of law falling outside the Rome I and Rome II Conventions (for instance where the allegations concern acta iure imperii); and cases involving allegations of clinical negligence abroad.
Recent cases include:
Cross-border Consumer Protection
Thomas’s cross-border practice includes consumer contract disputes, particularly and more recently claims arising out of the Covid-19 pandemic raising issues under the Denied Boarding Regulation and/or the Package Travel Regulations. He is well-versed in handling claims under section 75 of the Consumer Credit Act 1974
Recent matters have included:
Cross-border Commercial
Thomas also acts and advises in matters involving of dispute (or potential dispute) between businesses operating in the travel sector, for instance arising out of the indemnity terms between suppliers of holiday services and agents/organisers. He recently acted as junior to Sarah Prager KC in a multimillion claim in unjust enrichment, including allegations of breach of competition law, between an online travel agent and an airline concerning refunds paid to customers arising out of cancelled flights during the Covid-19 pandemic.
Thomas has a very busy clinical negligence practice in the High Court and County Courts, taking instructions typically from NHS bodies, although with some work on the claimant side. He has the ability to absorb new information quickly, and interpret and advise confidently on esoteric expert evidence. He is regularly instructed to draft detailed Schedules and Counter-Schedules, and has a strong command of the mathematical processes involved in quantification of damages, which make him a safe pair of hands at a joint settlement meeting.
Thomas assisted Laura Johnson KC with case preparation for the Supreme Court hearing in Paul & Anr. v Royal Wolverhampton NHS Trust (Case No 2022/38), a seminal case on the duty of care owed to secondary victims in the clinical context.
Thomas acts for various police forces in cases involving allegations of assault, wrongful arrest and false imprisonment, misfeasance in a public office and common law negligence. He frequently advises on police powers under PACE and the various Codes of Practice. With the spotlight on policing following both the Covid-19 pandemic and the significant increase in protest disruption, Thomas takes frequent instructions on the exercise of police power in novel and developing contexts.
Thomas has worked on two significant judicial review claims for the Home Office on policing policies and practices in the field of data protection: Thomas appeared as junior counsel for the Home Secretary in the Court of Appeal in R (Bridges) v Chief Constable South Wales Police [2020] EWCA Civ 1058 on the use of automated facial recognition technology by South Wales Police, and assisted the Home Secretary again in preparing evidence and Detailed Grounds of Defence in R (QSA & Ors.) v NPCC and SSHD [2021] EWHC 272 (Admin), a challenge to NPCC’s policy that all conviction records on the Police National Computer are retained until the subject reaches 100 years of age (known as the ‘100 year rule’).
Thomas takes instructions from both claimants and defendants across the spectrum of personal injury litigation, and writes and delivers regular briefings, webinars and training sessions on esoteric topics, from dog bites to highway design, e-scooters to defective premises.
He has a strong day-to-day practice in cases involving employers’ and occupiers’ liability, with a concomitant expertise in procedural matters of fixed costs, QOCS, fundamental dishonesty and Part 36. His focus is very often at the grey areas of liability – for instance, where employers might be liable for their employees’ intentional torts or where public authorities might be liable in negligence outside of the relevant statutory schemes.
Thomas has a growing business, property and commercial element to his practice, with experience of insolvency, landlord and tenant, real property, and company & partnership disputes, including those involving allegations of fraud.
As set out in other sections above, Thomas advises regularly on the operation and effect of the UK Sanctions regime and has a strong command of banking law and practice; and Thomas is frequently instructed in matters of private international law in the commercial context, particularly but not limited to instructions from businesses operating in the travel industry.
Regulated by the Bar Standards Board (BSB)
Regulated by the Bar Standards Board (BSB) and holds a current practising certificate.
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Regulated by the Bar Standards Board (BSB)
Regulated by the Bar Standards Board (BSB) and holds a current practising certificate.
View my privacy policy.
Deka Chambers: 5 Norwich Street, London EC4A 1DR